Defeat the Imperialists!

IBT Statement on NATO’s Libya Campaign

The following statement was first published by the International Bolshevik Tendency
on 1 April 2011.

NATO’s massive military campaign in Libya, which is taking place under the guise
of a “humanitarian” effort to “protect” civilians, is at bottom an
attempt by the U.S., Britain, France and other lesser imperialists to secure valuable oil
and natural gas reserves and depose Muammar Qaddafi, a sometimes troublesome client.

During the four decades he has ruled Libya, Qaddafi (unlike Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali and
Hosni Mubarak, the recently deposed dictators of Tunisia and Egypt) has exhibited
considerable independence from imperialist control. Qaddafi modeled himself on
Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser, who seized the Suez Canal and galvanized mass support in
the Arab world in the 1950s by posing as an implacable enemy of imperialism and Zionism.
In the 1970s Qaddafi, a self-styled “socialist” who routinely denounced the
Saudi royals and other pro-imperialist Arab rulers as thieves and Zionist lackeys,
nationalized Libya’s oil and gas industry. Under Qaddafi’s regime some of the
profits from the energy sector, which accounts for the vast majority of the
country’s exports and government revenues, were used to provide education and
healthcare for the population.

The fall of Ben Ali and Mubarak led Qaddafi to fear that he might be next. Like Tunisia
and Egypt, Libya has a lot of unemployed youth and there have been signs of popular
unrest. When demonstrators occupied government housing projects in several cities in
January [2011], the regime responded by offering to set up a $24 billion development
fund.

According to a Saudi-owned publication, when Qaddafi learned of plans for a “Day
of Rage” on 17 February [2011] (the fifth anniversary of the brutal suppression of a
previous protest) he personally intervened in an attempt to halt it:

“Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has dealt with the calls being
issued by the National Conference for the Libyan Opposition and Libyan activists for a
Libyan ‘Day of Rage’ to take place on 17 February, modeled on similar events
in Tunisia and Egypt, by issuing an unprecedented warnings [sic] against any attempts to
create chaos and instability in Libya.

“In the last few days, Gaddafi privately met with Libyan political
activists, journalists, and media figures and he issued severe warnings that these
professions would be held responsible should they participate in any way in disturbing the
peace or creating chaos in Libya.”—“Gaddafi ready for
Libya’s ‘Day of Rage’,” Asharq Al-Awsat, 9 February
[2011]

In Benghazi, Libya’s second largest city, and other smaller centers, the recent
NCLO-initiated protests routed Qaddafi loyalists and left rebels in control of the eastern
part of the country. Undoubtedly many of the demonstrators were motivated by hatred for an
oppressive regime and a desire for “freedom” and “democracy” and
presumably imagined that they were participating in semi-spontaneous mobilizations similar
to those taking place elsewhere in the region. But unlike in Tunisia or Egypt, the Libyan
uprising seems to have been effectively directed from the beginning by a mélange of
conscious pro-imperialists, disaffected elements of the old regime and Islamist
reactionaries. This may explain why the Wall
Street Journal (23 February [2011]) was far more positive about the Libyan protests
than it had been about those in Tunisia and Egypt: “The U.S. and Europe should help
Libyans overthrow the Gadhafi regime.” The same sentiment was echoed by the rest of
the corporate media, as well as by practically every reactionary Arab regime.

The rationalization for military intervention in Libya recalled the
“humanitarian” concerns used to justify the NATO/U.S. bombing of Yugoslavia in
1995 and 1999. As many critics have observed, no equivalent calls have been made for the
protection of protesters in Bahrain, Yemen, Saudi Arabia or other reliable client states,
just as none were heard when the Zionist military was massacring Palestinians in Gaza two
years ago.

Initially the revolt against Qaddafi appeared to have considerable momentum. Two Libyan
pilots flew their fighter planes to Malta and reports circulated that military units were
refusing orders and some were even going over to the protesters. Various diplomats broke
with the regime, as did some key domestic figures, including air force head Aref Sharif
and Interior Minister Abdel Fattah Younes. On 21 February [2011], in an apparent attempt
to boost the opposition, British Foreign Secretary William Hague publicized rumors that
Qaddafi had fled the country.

The loss of Benghazi and a wave of defections from the regime created widespread
expectations that the government would soon fall, but within a matter of days, Qaddafi
managed to consolidate his support and launched expeditions to recapture rebel-held
territory. Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya, citing unpublished reports from Libya, provided the
following account of how this was achieved:

“Amongst the ranking members of the military, Mahdi Al-Arab, the deputy
chief of Libya’s military staff, was said to have renounced Qaddafi. Al-Arab,
however, has modified his position by saying that he does not want to see Libya spiral
into a civil war that will allow foreign intervention and tutelage. This is why Al-Arab
prevented the people of his city, Zawarah, from joining the revolt and going to nearby
Tripoli….

Nazemroaya also reported that Qaddafi promised to “step down in about one
year” and not attempt to install one of his sons in his place.

Unlike in Egypt and Tunisia, where the protests were mass popular expressions of
opposition to brutal oppression, the conflict between Qaddafi loyalists and the rebels
headquartered in Benghazi amounted to a small-scale civil war between qualitatively
equivalent capitalist factions. Marxists take no side in such conflicts, although we of
course oppose the killing of civilians by the combatants. The entry of the NATO powers,
however, transformed this conflict into a struggle between a neocolonial country and
several imperialist powers (and their indigenous proxies). Class-conscious workers must
oppose this reactionary colonial war in every possible way, including labor strikes
against the production and transportation of war materiel.

After their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan the U.S. and other imperialists are
reluctant to openly invade another predominantly Muslim country. While the rebel forces
are dismissed by many analysts as a negligible factor, the overwhelming dominance of NATO
airpower (as well as the probability of some sort of imperialist military presence on the
ground[3][3] The
Sunday Mirror [London] reported on 20 March that “Hundreds of British SAS
soldiers have been operating with rebel groups inside Libya for three
weeks….” is obviously creating very serious difficulties for the
Qaddafi regime. There has been considerable speculation about a possible partition and the
recognition of Benghazi as the capital of an “independent” protectorate in
Libya’s oil-rich eastern region. The rebels’ Transitional National Council
appears to be laying the basis for turning over the country’s petroleum resources to
their imperial godfathers:

“Libyan rebels in Benghazi said they have created a new national oil
company to replace the corporation controlled by leader Muammar Qaddafi whose assets were
frozen by the United Nations Security Council.

“The Transitional National Council released a statement announcing the
decision made at a March 19 meeting to establish the ‘Libyan Oil Company as
supervisory authority on oil production and policies in the country, based temporarily in
Benghazi, and the appointment of an interim director general’ of the company.

“The Council also said it ‘designated the Central Bank of Benghazi
as a monetary authority competent in monetary policies in Libya and the appointment of a
governor to the Central Bank of Libya, with a temporary headquarters in Benghazi.’

“The Security Council adopted a resolution on March 17 that froze the
foreign assets of the Libyan National Oil Corp. and the Central Bank of Libya, both
described in the text as ‘a potential source of funding’ for Qaddafi’s
regime.”—Bloomberg.com,
22 March [2011]

We do not pretend that the Qaddafi regime is in any way progressive. It is not. But
getting rid of Qaddafi’s corrupt and brutal dictatorship is the job of the workers
and oppressed masses of Libya—not foreign colonialists and their local proxies. Over
70 years ago, the great Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky outlined the Marxist attitude
on this issue:

“In Brazil there now reigns a semifascist regime that every
revolutionary can only view with hatred. Let us assume, however, that on the morrow
England enters into a military conflict with Brazil. I ask you on whose side of the
conflict will the working class be? I will answer for myself personally—in this case
I will be on the side of ‘fascist’ Brazil against ‘democratic’
Great Britain. Why? Because in the conflict between them it will not be a question of
democracy or fascism. If England should be victorious, she will put another fascist in Rio
de Janeiro and will place double chains on Brazil. If Brazil on the contrary should be
victorious, it will give a mighty impulse to national and democratic consciousness of the
country and will lead to the overthrow of the Vargas dictatorship. The defeat of England
will at the same time deliver a blow to British imperialism and will give an impulse to
the revolutionary movement of the British proletariat.”—“Anti-Imperialist Struggle is Key to Liberation,”
23 September 1938

Various conservative commentators, including former U.S. Marine Eric Margolis, have
noted the obvious parallels between the current NATO campaign in Libya and the U.S.-led
assault on Iraq in 2003:

“As in the case of Iraq, the assault on Libya was preceded by a huge
barrage of anti-Gadaffi propaganda and steaming moral outrage by western media and
politicians. American TV crews rushed to Libya to witness the wicked colonel get his
comeuppance. None went to Bahrain or Yemen.”—“A New
Crusade,” 21 March [2011]

George Friedman of the pro-imperialist think tank STRATFOR describes the Transitional
National Council as “a very diverse and sometimes mutually hostile group of tribes
and individuals, bound together by hostility to Gadhafi and not much else.” He
considers them to be little more than “a Western puppet”:

“The West’s ability to impose order on them without governing
them, particularly in a short amount of time, is difficult to imagine. They remind me of
Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan, anointed by the Americans, distrusted by much of the country
and supported by a fractious [imperialist] coalition.”—“Libya, the
West and the Narrative of Democracy,” STRATFOR, 21 March [2011]

Many liberals who were taken in by the “humanitarian” cover story and
supported the idea of a “no-fly” zone professed shock when this morphed into
air strikes on Libyan military units. Leftist supporters of the Benghazi-based
“Libyan Revolution” find themselves in the uncomfortable position of having to
explain why those who embrace NATO’s military intervention should be viewed as
anything other than imperialist stooges. Earlier there had been reports of some elements
of the anti-Qaddafi coalition expressing opposition to foreign intervention, but this
sentiment apparently evaporated as Qaddafi’s forces advanced.

The British Workers Power group has been among the most enthusiastic backers of the
Benghazi rebels. On 19 March [2011], as the imperialist bombing commenced, Workers Power
continued to pledge its “unconditional support”:

“The rebellion against Gadaffi’s dictatorship deserves
unconditional support and that is not altered by the UN decision….

“Those who oppose powerful states have the right to get hold of arms
wherever they can and to take advantage of any weaknesses in their oppressors’
situation. That remains true even where the weaknesses are the result of imperialist
action. If, under cover of the no-fly zone, Libyan insurgents and revolutionaries can
retake positions, undermine the morale or the loyalty of Gadaffi’s troops and even
advance on the capital, Tripoli, that is a step forward for the Libyan revolution and
should be welcomed.

“At the same time we must oppose the US, British and French attack. The
imperialist attack allows Gadaffi to pose at home as defender of the nation. It gives him
a popular cause where before he had none. Now he can try to rally part of the people and
deploy them against the revolution.”—“Victory to the
Libyan Revolution!“

Workers Power’s celebration of the opportunities created for the “Libyan
Revolution” by imperialist intervention unmasks its ostensible
“opposition” to NATO’s military campaign as cynical posturing. This
latest disgraceful political capitulation recalls its earlier cowardly refusal to
militarily defend Bosnian Serbs against attacks by British, French and American warplanes
in August-September 1995 (see “LRCI Splits Over Bosnia Betrayal,”
1917 No.17). In each case Workers Power determines its position not on the basis
of Marxist principle but rather in accordance with what is currently popular.

A genuine struggle to uproot the hated and corrupt Qaddafi dictatorship must be linked
to a broader mobilization against the entire system of global capitalism that subjects the
vast majority of the world’s population to brutal exploitation. This must begin with
unconditional opposition to any and all imperialist interventions in neocolonial countries
like Libya.

The defense of Libya against imperialist attack is an issue of vital importance not
only to working people and the oppressed in North Africa and the Middle East, but also to
workers in the imperialist countries themselves. In “developed” and
“underdeveloped” countries alike, the historical interests of working people
are essentially identical.

The only way to liberate the enormous productive capacity of humanity from the
destructive irrationality of endless bloody wars for division and redivision of resources
and spheres of influence is through a chain of socialist revolutions that overturn the
entire imperialist world order. These in turn require the construction of
Leninist-Trotskyist parties deeply rooted in the proletariat and armed with the program of
permanent revolution.

1
“About ten days after 9/11, I went through the Pentagon and I saw Secretary Rumsfeld
and Deputy Secretary Wolfowitz. I went downstairs just to say hello to some of the people
on the Joint Staff who used to work for me, and one of the generals called me in. He said,
‘Sir, you’ve got to come in and talk to me a second.’ I said,
‘Well, you’re too busy.’ He said, ‘No, no.’ He says,
‘We’ve made the decision we’re going to war with Iraq.’ This was
on or about the 20th of September….

“So I came back to see him a few weeks later, and by that time
we were bombing in Afghanistan. I said, ‘Are we still going to war with Iraq?’
And he said, ‘Oh, it’s worse than that.’ He reached over on his desk. He
picked up a piece of paper. And he said, ‘I just got this down from
upstairs’—meaning the Secretary of Defense’s
office—‘today.’ And he said, ‘This is a memo that describes how
we’re going to take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq, and then
Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and, finishing off, Iran.’”—Democracy
Now, 2 March, 2007

2
According to Bob Woodward’s account in Veil: The Secret Wars of the CIA
1981-1987, Magarieff was linked to the CIA via Sudan’s President Nimeri.
Woodward cites a 5 December 1983 CIA report that Magarieff “believed that Sudan and
the U.S. were his only friends….he said that following another period of training
he hoped to mount a campaign against Libya that would give his organization more
credibility.” Woodward writes “until this happened [CIA chief William] Casey
would not be able to get a presidential finding supporting the anti-Qaddafi
movement.” The National Front for the Salvation of Libya apparently lost little time
establishing “credibility”:

“The LNSF claimed responsibility for the daring attack on
Qadhafi's headquarters at Bab al Aziziyah on May 8, 1984. Although the coup attempt failed
and Qadhafi escaped unscathed, dissident groups claimed that some eighty Libyans, Cubans,
and East Germans perished. According to various sources, the United States Central
Intelligence Agency trained and supported the LNSF before and after the May 8
operation.”—"LIBYA: a country
study,” Federal Research Division, Library of Congress

3
The Sunday
Mirror [London] reported on 20 March that “Hundreds of British SAS soldiers
have been operating with rebel groups inside Libya for three weeks….”